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Bishops Offer Principles
BY The Editors
September 13-19, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/4/09 at 12:57 PM
The U.S. bishops stand strongly in support of the
principle of health-care reform.
And
equally strongly, they reject any reform initiative that would involve taxpayer
funding of abortion.
The
Register’s coverage of the health-care reform debate so far has focused
primarily on the second aspect of the bishops’ position, for good reason:
President Barack Obama and the congressional Democratic leadership continue to
push a health-care reform bill that, if passed in its current form, would
result in taxpayer support of health-care insurance plans that include coverage
of abortion services.
It’s
absolutely crucial that Catholics demand the deletion of this provision from
the health-care reform bill. If not, whatever the merits of the rest of the
bill, no Catholic should support ObamaCare.
That’s
not merely our judgment, nor are we alone in making the sanctity-of-life
question our priority in assessing the health-care reform initiative launched
by the president. It’s the same priority as that of our bishops, who have said
this summer that an abortion mandate is “the line in the sand” that ObamaCare
must not cross.
If
this line is crossed and an abortion mandate remains in the congressional
health-care reform bill, the Church’s shepherds, collectively and individually,
have affirmed in numerous recent public statements that they will lead all Catholics
in opposition to the bill.
At
the same time, it’s also important that Catholic Americans not lose sight of
the first component of the U.S. bishops’ two-pronged position on health-care
reform — their strong support for the basic principle of reform.
According
to Bishop William Murphy of Rockville Centre, N.Y., chairman of the U.S.
bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, “Genuine
health-care reform that protects the life and dignity of all is a moral imperative
and a vital national obligation.” He stated this in a July 17 letter he sent to
Congress on behalf of all the American bishops.
In
a nutshell, the bishops say health-care reform should deliver: a truly
universal health policy with respect for human life and dignity; access for all
with a special concern for the poor and inclusion of legal immigrants; pursuing
the common good and preserving pluralism, including freedom of conscience and
variety of options; and restraining costs and applying them equitably across
the spectrum of payers.
Elsewhere
on their health-care reform website (USCCB.org/healthcare), the bishops
elaborate on the principles underlying their position.
“Access
to health care should not depend on where a person works, how much a family
earns, or where a person lives,” the bishops state. “Instead, every person,
created in the image and likeness of God, has a right to life and to those
things necessary to sustain life, including affordable, quality health care.
This teaching is rooted in the biblical call to heal the sick and to serve ‘the
least of these,’ our concern for human life and dignity, and the principle of
the common good.”
These
are powerful words, anchoring the U.S. bishops’ support for health-care reform
firmly within the Gospel imperatives proclaimed by Christ. They are words that
all Catholic Americans should take to heart and ponder carefully, as they
consider where they stand personally regarding health-care reform.
It’s
also important to remember that most of the specifics of the health-care reform
bill will be subject to prudential judgment, in terms of whether they actually
will deliver the Catholic objectives identified by the bishops. And as prudential
judgments are involved, not basic Church doctrine, it’s entirely possible that
individual bishops will come to different conclusions about whether the final
version of the bill is worthy of Catholic support.
It’s equally possible for Catholic
groups that are experts in the field of health care, such as the Catholic
Health Association and the Catholic Medical Association, could come to
different conclusions about the bill, even though they share a strong commitment
to the objectives identified by the bishops. On the other hand, it’s also well
within the realm of possibility for Congress to craft a reform package that
virtually all credible Catholic authorities will be able to join in support.
As
for the rest of us, we aren’t bound to follow the prudential judgments of
others, even those of the U.S. bishops, when we communicate as Catholic voters
with our elected representatives about whether we support or oppose the final
version of ObamaCare that comes before Congress.
If,
after giving the matter careful thought we reach a different prudential
judgment, we can express this view in the public square in good conscience —
although, as faithful Catholics, we should always assign a great deal of weight
to what our bishops have had to say.
All this takes us back, in terms of
reflecting on what the bishops have said about health-care reform, to where we
started, with the crucial issue that isn’t subject to prudential judgment: the
responsibility of all Catholic Americans to reject the inclusion of an abortion
mandate in the health-care reform bill. It would be a great loss if the current
opportunity to address the other important health-care issues identified by our
bishops is squandered merely because the Democratic Party remains so aligned to
the demands of the abortion lobby.
As
Richard Doerflinger, associate director of the U.S. bishops’ Secretariat of
Pro-Life Activities, stated in an Aug. 21 commentary posted at the USCCB
website, “The Church insists that reform is too important and legitimate a goal
to be hijacked by destructive agendas such as government-mandated abortion
coverage.”
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